NASA's Curiosity Mars rover has passed the milestone of 100,000 shots
fired by its laser. It uses the laser as one way to check which
chemical elements are in rocks and soils.
The 100,000th shot was one of a series of 300 to investigate 10
locations on a rock called "Ithaca" in late October, at a distance of 13
feet, 3 inches (4.04 meters) from the laser and telescope on rover's
mast. The Chemistry and Camera instrument (ChemCam) uses the infrared
laser to excite material in a pinhead-size spot on the target into a
glowing, ionized gas, called plasma. ChemCam observes that spark with
the telescope and analyzes the spectrum of light to identify elements in
the target.
"Passing 100,000 laser shots is terribly exciting and is providing a
remarkable set of chemical data for Mars," said ChemCam co-investigator
Horton Newsom of the University of New Mexico, Albuquerque.
As of the start of December, ChemCam has fired its laser on Mars more
than 102,000 times, at more than 420 rock or soil targets. Virtually
every shot yields a spectrum of data returned to Earth. Most targets get
zapped at several points with 30 laser pulses at each point. The
instrument has also returned more than 1,600 images taken by its remote
micro-imager camera.
An international team of scientists and students is mining
information from ChemCam to document the diversity or materials on the
surface inside Mars' Gale Crater and the geological processes that
formed them. "These materials include dust, wind-blown soil, water-lain
sediments derived from the crater rim, veins of sulfates and igneous
rocks that may be ejecta from other parts of Mars," Newsom said.
Each pulse delivers more than a million watts of power for about five
one-billionths of a second. The technique used by ChemCam, called
laser-induced breakdown spectroscopy, has been used to assess
composition of targets in other extreme environments, such as inside
nuclear reactors and on the sea floor. Experimental applications have
included environmental monitoring and cancer detection. NASA's Mars
Science Laboratory Project, using the Curiosity rover, is the first
mission to use it on another planet.
ChemCam is one of 10 instruments in Curiosity's science payload. The
U.S. Department of Energy's Los Alamos National Laboratory, Los Alamos,
N.M., developed ChemCam in partnership with scientists and engineers
funded by the French national space agency, CNES, the University of
Toulouse and research agency, CNRS. The laser was built by Thales,
Paris. More information about ChemCam is available at http://www.msl-chemcam.com .
NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, a division of the California
Institute of Technology, Pasadena, manages the Mars Science Laboratory
Project, including Curiosity, for NASA's Science Mission Directorate,
Washington. JPL designed and built the rover.
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